Open Access
Open access
Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs

Flirting with Autocracy in Indonesia: Jokowi's Majoritarianism and its Democratic Legacy

Marcus Mietzner 1
1
 
Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-02-21
scimago Q1
SJR0.780
CiteScore5.0
Impact factor2.4
ISSN18681034, 18684882
Abstract

After ruling Indonesia for a decade, Joko Widodo (or popularly called "Jokowi") left the presidency in 2024 amid a heated debate over his democratic record. While his high approval ratings indicated support in the broader population, pro-democracy activists were scathing. Indeed, under his presidency, many democratic achievements of previous periods eroded. Yet democracy, however damaged, survived Jokowi's rule. This article adds to scholarship on this outcome of a harmed but enduring Indonesian democracy. It looks at how Jokowi's majoritarian thinking led him to undermine democracy when he felt he had the majority's support for his actions. Believing that democracy is doing what the majority wants, approves, or tolerates, he used polls to identify segments of democracy he could attack. At the same time, his majoritarianism also set him limits: if a majority was opposed, he retreated. This left Indonesia with a declining democracy, but one that did not cross over into fully authoritarian territory.

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